Anne Hathaway is more than aware that she was intensely disliked four years ago.

Her defenders would say that people really had no reason to hate her. I don’t know, Hathaway kind of rubbed me the wrong way during that time. The late Joan Rivers gave the actress a “blech” on David Letterman for the way she preened and posed with the Oscar she received in 2013 for playing the tortured prostitute Fantine in “Les Miserable.”

Soon after, social media lit up with anti-Hathaway sentiment, fomented by “Hathahaters,” people who found something fake and smug about the way she tried to come across as nice, good, humble and grateful.

“It’s not that I’ve gotten a rhino skin to it, but I sort of see all of that for what it is,” said the actress, 34. She is promoting her upcoming film “Colossal.”

“How the world feels about me has nothing to do with me,” she said. “How other people treat me has nothing to do with me.”

On the other hand, she acknowledged that she did take some of the haters’ criticism as constructive: “If anything that anybody said resonated with me as something I’d like to work on for myself, I took it in like that. And to that extent, I feel like I got to shortcut a lot of my growth. To that extent, even though I wouldn’t have chosen to go through it, I still found a way to be grateful to it.”

So, she may have made peace with her haters but not with social media where they reside. For example, she said she regrets recently posting a photo of her baby son on Instagram. She gave birth to her son Jonathon last year, and posted her first photo of him on March 9.

The photo shows her son from the back, watching a video of her giving a speech on gender equality at the United Nations to mark International Women’s Day.

“I decided to post a shot of the back of his head, and almost as soon as I’d done it, I wished that I hadn’t,” she shared. “I felt like I had broken some kind of a seal in inviting people into my life.”

Fortunately for Hathaway, the comments with the photo are generally positive, with people complimenting her on how her son is cute and how she is in inspiration with her work as a United Nations Goodwill Ambassador.

Perhaps that’s a sign that the tide is turning in public opinion about her. So are the positive reviews she has been receiving for her performance as a burnout alcoholic writer in “Colossal.”